Correction: One Deadly Day story

(AP) – In a story March 10 chronicling shooting deaths on a single day across the U.S., The Associated Press, relying on information from the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, erroneously reported the name of a man shot dead by an off-duty officer during an alleged attempt to rob a White Castle restaurant in the Missouri city. The man killed was Donovan Thomas, 21, not Thomas Donovan.

A corrected version of the story is below:

1 deadly day: names and lives behind gunshot stats

Morning, noon and night: Names and lives behind gunshot stats trace a single deadly day in US

By DAVID CRARY and ADAM GELLER

AP National Writers

It was just past 1 a.m. when they found Christopher Cotton’s body, slumped in the driver’s seat at a Buffalo, N.Y., intersection, shot dead by an assailant who left all the car’s windows up, the doors locked. Little more than an hour earlier, the pharmaceutical technician had joined family for drinks and YouTube videos, then went to meet his girlfriend. He never made it.

The killing of the 42-year-old father of three was the industrial city’s first murder of the year. But for a country that would not wake for hours, the slaying was merely the first of another deadly day, the latest addition to an endless count of Americans who are killed with guns.

The school massacre in Newtown, Conn., on Dec. 14 was a horrific anomaly. Most fatal shootings claim only a single life and draw only the briefest attention.

From the biggest cities to the smallest towns, more than 31,000 people die of gunshot wounds in the U.S. each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s an average of nearly 87 a day. About 30 of those are murdered. More than 50 take their own lives. Still others die in accidental shootings, during police intervention or from other causes.

The Associated Press set out to chronicle one such ordinary day _ Jan. 19. There is no way of knowing exactly how many shooting deaths there were on that Saturday. But just one shooting made national news: A former pastor, his wife and three children were slain at their home near Albuquerque, N.M. The couple’s 15-year-old son, Nehemiah Griego, was charged with their murders.

Most, though, will recall the day as the start of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend, capped by the presidential inauguration, each prompting reflection on how to quell violence. But in a nation whose citizens own more than 300 million guns, such events do not disrupt the metronomic toll of shootings.

And in that way, Jan. 19 was just another day.

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By 2:41 a.m. slumber cloaked most of the homes on tree-lined Deer Trace Drive in the Atlanta suburb of McDonough, Ga. But inside one house, three boys stirred. A pair of brothers _ 14 and 15 _ were hosting a friend for a sleepover. Earlier in the evening, their mother had given them permission to examine her empty .38-caliber revolver, police said. But sometime over the next few hours, the boys loaded the weapon, then put it aside and apparently forgot.

It’s not clear what prompted the younger boy to pick up the gun again. But when he pointed it at his brother and pulled the trigger, the bullet hit the Union High School sophomore in the chest. Emergency workers were unable to save him.

Investigators have determined the shooting was accidental. But the 14-year-old has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and investigators may present his mother’s case to a grand jury.

The boy would not be the only victim of an accidental shooting on this day: Within hours, Jeffrey Dennehy, 23, died in Gresham. Ore., when a gun held by a close friend mistakenly discharged.

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At 1:04 a.m., Anthony Burns, 31, was shot dead on an east Cleveland street. Four people have been charged with his murder.

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The White Castle on St. Louis’ north side was bathed in light, even at 3:50 a.m., when Donovan Thomas stepped to the burger joint’s counter and drew a pistol. Back in November, with a security camera rolling, a masked man wielding a shotgun held up the same restaurant before fleeing into the darkness. Police say that man was Thomas, 21, who lived nearby. This time, though, two off-duty police officers hired by the manager were waiting.

The officers, who were in uniform, ordered Thomas to drop the gun.

“Why, at that last moment they said `Freeze!’ he carried on, that’s what gets me, you know what I mean?” says George Fields, among a group of older men who gather at the restaurant for coffee.

When Thomas refused, one officer, a 21-year veteran, shot him in the abdomen. An ambulance rushed Thomas to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Thomas’ pistol turned out to be a BB gun. The officer, who a police spokesman would not identify, was placed on administrative leave for three days, but is back on the job without being charged.

“Everybody’s got a gun. Just because he’s a dummy doesn’t mean you have to kill him,” says Fields, who wonders what might have changed both Thomas’ decision and the policewoman’s. “You can’t stop it from happening again, but maybe you could slow it down.”

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In Hampton, Va., Joseph McQueen, 30, and Clifton Christian, 24, were shot and killed outside a bar about 1:45 a.m.

In Allentown, Pa., Kyle Stroman, 20, was shot dead at an intersection at about 2 a.m.

Late in the morning, shots rang out near the small East Texas town of Winnsboro, killing 37-year-old Juvenal Gonzales.

A self-employed painter, Gonzales was separated from the mother of his four children and had come to her home to pick them up for visitation. An argument ensued, and Gonzales was shot by a man at the house, the Franklin County sheriff’s office said.

For some people in neighboring Hopkins County, the news was jolting. The man charged with Gonzales’ killing _ Clint Weldon Wilson, 31 _ had killed before; claiming self-defense he eventually went free.

“The victim’s family in this new case _ I can’t possibly imagine how difficult it would be for them to know that someone had done this before,” said Martin Braddy, the prosecutor in the earlier case, in which Wilson was charged with murdering Justin Pawlik, 27, during a 2011 struggle. At the scene was a woman who’d broken up with Pawlik and befriended Wilson.

But Texas’ stand-your-ground law allows deadly force in some circumstances when a person feels threatened, and a grand jury declined to indict Wilson.

Pawlik’s mother, Julie Bailey, said she had feared Wilson would cause more harm.

“Now another guy is dead,” she said. “If they don’t get rid of that law, they better start getting ready to dig more graves.”

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In Greensboro, N.C., Matthew Obrian Norris, 28, was shot multiple times after attacking a friend who’d asked him to leave. The 3:28 a.m. shooting was ruled a justifiable homicide.

At the University of Idaho, Jason David Monson, an 18-year-old freshman and talented horseman who won trophies for cowboy mounted shooting, fatally shot himself in his dorm room.

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Around 12:20 p.m., gunshots erupted at the Bay Area Rapid Transit station in San Leandro, Calif. Ken Seets was waiting there for a bus, heading home after work.

One bullet struck the 50-year-old Seets in the chest, and he died within minutes in the arms of a bus driver who tried to aid him. Police said it was crossfire between members of rival gangs, and they are seeking an 18-year-old suspect.

Seets, who didn’t own a car, delivered dry cleaning supplies for nearly 20 years. “I never saw him mad,” said his boss and good friend, Cynthia Perez.

Raised on a farm in Georgia, Seets joined the Army after high school, met his longtime girlfriend, Doleen Stevenson, after she divorced another soldier, and followed her to the Bay Area. She said he was a loving surrogate father to her daughter.

He also forged a close relationship with Tammy Scott and her son, Malcolm, coaching him in sports, urging him to work hard at school.

“When Ken first came to California, he was a stranger,” Scott said. “At his memorial service, there was a line out the door… Once he found you, you had a friend to the end.”

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Around 1:40 p.m., Leslie Stubblefield, 43, was found dead of a gunshot wound in Kansas City, Kan.

In California’s Humboldt County, the body of Jacob Allen Green, 24, of Newport, Ore., was found in his vehicle. Police say Green shot himself a day after killing a 16-year-old girl, Kayla Ann Hendrickson, near Tillamook, Ore.

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Back for the afternoon at Cleveland’s UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital, Dr. Anthony DeRoss hurried to prepare for a scheduled appendectomy when the pager on his belt flashed an alert: Level 1 trauma patient en route.

The patient was a 6-year-old cherub with pigtails named Nevaeh Benson. At 1:13 p.m. she’d been at home on East 116th Street when her father sent her to fetch something for an infant sister. Family members heard a thump, and Edmund Benson ran upstairs to find Nevaeh sprawled across the bedroom floor with his handgun. Police said she found it where her father hid it and accidentally shot herself in the face.

By law, Edmund Benson, 23, was not supposed to have a gun. He has a felony record and has been charged with having a weapon under disability and endangering a child.

At the hospital, though, DeRoss’ team knew only that they had a gunshot victim in dire condition _ and that the death rate from such injuries is much higher than other types of trauma.

“I always think about what we could’ve done to prevent it…that’s where my mind always travels to, how can we keep this from happening again,” DeRoss says. “And there’s not always an easy answer.”

If only doctors could turn back the clock and show parents the risks, he says. If only they could save children like Nevaeh. Days later, her photo smiled alongside a newspaper notice that made no mention of how she died. “Summoned by angels,” it said.

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In Mulberry, Ill., Charles Chrisman, 40, fatally shot himself in his home and was found about 2:43 p.m.

At about 4:15 p.m., Jermaine Foster, 30, was found shot dead inside a car in Fort Wayne, Ind.

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Kristy Aschliman made a point to keep in touch with family, sometimes calling twice a day to talk about music or work. But recently, there was also talk of trouble. Four times in the past few months, Aschliman’s apartment in Idaho Falls, Idaho, had been burglarized. The 21-year-old bought a small pink-and-white pistol for protection, but it was stolen, too, according to her grandmother, Estelle Nation.

Just before 1 p.m., Aschliman’s car swerved into the snow along semi-rural Lincoln Road, and she ran. A man with a gun gave chase, fired, and four bullets struck Aschliman in the head, police said. She died there.

After setting up roadblocks, Sheriff’s officers arrested Adan Arroyo, 22, and charged him with murder. Investigators will not comment on his motive or relationship to Aschliman. Arroyo has a lengthy court record for vandalism, theft and other charges. At the time of her death, Aschliman was facing drug possession charges.

At a memorial service, relatives and friends filed past an open casket; they recalled Aschliman’s work with disabled children, and the time she lavished styling her hair and fingernails. But there is little peace for a family that has long celebrated the April birthday Aschliman shared with her father and her closest aunt.

“It’s going to be hell,” her grandmother said.

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In Long Beach, Calif., three men and a woman entered a mobile home at 4:30 p.m. and opened fire, killing Jose Luis Vidal, 24.

In San Francisco’s Alamo Square neighborhood, Jamal Gaines, 26, died after being hit by multiple gunshots at 5:30.

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Rene Trejo worked hard as a bricklayer in Memphis, and loved soccer so much that he played on three different teams. But his sister-in-law says his plan was to move back to his homeland of Mexico, where he’d been sending money to help his impoverished mother open a restaurant.

The homecoming took place _ but not as the family could have imagined. Trejo, 28, was killed in a nighttime robbery attempt on Jan. 19. His remains were sent back to San Luis Potosi for a funeral Mass and burial.

According to police, Trejo was in his car with two friends outside a Z-Market convenience store when three men approached and demanded money. One fired a shot that fatally wounded Trejo; no arrests have been reported.

Trejo, who was unmarried, came to the United States 10 years ago, followed two years later by his younger brother, Oscar, a roofer.

Oscar’s wife, Dora, said Rene was in the U.S. illegally, but added: “What he came here to do was to better his family and help out his mother.”

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In Rosewood, Fla., John Freddrick Alford, 63, died after being hit by buckshot fired by a youth with whom he was hunting wild hogs.

At about 10 p.m., the body of Hurbert Dewayne Jackson, 27, was found on a roadside in Little Rock, Ark., the victim of a shooting.

The obituary for Kristi Suckla, as posted by a Dallas-area funeral home, is strikingly brief.

“Kristi was born on December 5, 1968, and passed away on Saturday, January 19, 2013. Kristi was a resident of Grapevine, Texas.”

An accompanying video tribute, though wordless, conveyed much more _ photographs of Suckla savoring vacations at the beach and in the mountains, grinning with her two children, and posing with her husband, Kelly.

There was no hint of the tragedy that unfolded that Saturday night at the Sweet 16 birthday party for the Sucklas’ daughter, Rachel.

Though the couple was estranged, and Kristi was living at her parents’ house with her children, Kelly Suckla had been expected to attend the party, according to police.

For reasons not yet publicly disclosed, an argument broke out around 10 p.m. Police say Kelly Suckla fatally shot Kristi with a handgun, then killed himself.

The obituary for Kelly Suckla, 43, described him as a devoted father, but made no mention of Kristi. “Everyone who knew Kelly knew of his love for his family and his friends,” it said.

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Around 9:45 p.m., in California’s Tulare County, Osevio Lopez, 34, was found by highway patrol officers in the driver’s seat of a vehicle, fatally wounded by a shot to the head.

In the El Sereno community of Los Angeles, Angel Serna Mancilla, 27 was fatally wounded by gunfire during an argument at a taco truck.

In Picayune, Miss., Nickoles Ray Sullivan, 33, was shot dead outside his home. His live-in girlfriend was charged with murder.

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By all accounts, David Braswell shared a fierce relationship with Tamara Smith, his longtime girlfriend and mother of four of his children.

Police in Thomasville, N.C., say Braswell was arrested in 2005 for assaulting Smith. Braswell’s mother recalls the time she saw Smith chasing her 280-pound son down the street, swinging at him and swearing.

“They argued for the last 14 years,” Nona Lee Braswell says. “It was a rocky relationship, but they loved each other.”

That may be so, but when Smith’s father, Clifton Gregory Dennis, heard screams inside the house he shared with the couple just after 10:30 p.m., he grabbed a .22-caliber rifle. In the hall, Dennis confronted the 38-year-old Braswell, who police say had his hands around Smith’s throat. Dennis fired two shots. The first struck the wall near the ceiling. The second hit Braswell in the chest as the children watched.

Dennis, 56, is barred from owning a gun because of a felony record dating to 1987. When he faced drug charges in 2004, he was also convicted of possession of a firearm by a felon. Braswell’s death brought another wrongful gun possession charge and Dennis pleaded guilty March 7 and was sentenced to 15 to 27 months, requiring six months in prison and three years’ probation. But investigators determined the killing was justified as self-defense or the defense of others.

That decision angers Braswell’s family, but they’re trying to focus on caring for his sons and daughters.

“God love little children who have to go through stuff like that,” said Braswell’s aunt, Zondra Ayers.

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Around 11:40 p.m., 20-year-old Ruben Gonzalez Jr. was shot dead in Santa Ana, Calif., in what police said may have been a gang-related incident.

In Fort Washington, Md., 16-year-old Marcus Jones was fatally shot as he left a birthday party that drew members of rival youth gangs, Baby Haiti and Danger Boys. Two teenage suspects were arrested, said Prince George’s County police.